About the Authors:
D. Mouttet
Affiliation: Department of Surgery, Institut Curie, Paris, France
M. Laé
Affiliation: Department of Tumor Biology, Institut Curie, Paris, France
M. Caly
Affiliation: Department of Tumor Biology, Institut Curie, Paris, France
D. Gentien
Affiliation: Department of Translational Research, Institut Curie, Paris, France
S. Carpentier
Affiliation: QIAGEN Marseille SA, Marseille, France
H. Peyro-Saint-Paul
Affiliation: QIAGEN Marseille SA, Marseille, France
A. Vincent-Salomon
Affiliation: Department of Tumor Biology, Institut Curie, Paris, France
R. Rouzier
Affiliation: Department of Surgery, Institut Curie, Paris, France
B. Sigal-Zafrani
Affiliation: Department of Tumor Biology, Institut Curie, Paris, France
X. Sastre-Garau
Affiliation: Department of Tumor Biology, Institut Curie, Paris, France
F. Reyal
* E-mail: [email protected]
Affiliations Department of Surgery, Institut Curie, Paris, France, Residual Tumor and Response to Treatment Team, Institut Curie, Department of Translational Research, Paris, France
Introduction
The Estrogen Receptor (ER) and Progesterone Receptor (PR) status are of critical interest in determining the prognosis of breast cancer patients and the potential benefit of adjuvant hormonal therapy. Their status is routinely assessed as well as the HER2 status that is also a prognosis marker and determines patient’s eligibility to monoclonal antibody trastuzumab therapy.
The current standard methodology for measuring ER, PR and HER2 status, is immunohistochemistry (IHC), with additional fluorescent in situ hybridization assay to clarify HER2 immuno-histochemical status. It is subject to intra-laboratory and inter-laboratory variability. For instance, the inter-observer agreement in scoring hormone receptor status by IHC can vary from moderate to almost perfect (k = 0.78 to 0.85 for ER status, k = 0.71 to 0.72 for PR status [1] [2]). The discordance rate is mainly due to differences of interpretation of the specificity of staining and the histological structures after immunostaining. For example, Rhodes et al [3] found considerable inter-laboratory variation, especially for low estrogen receptor positivity, with a false negative rate between 30% and 60%. Arihiro et al [4] studied the inter-method variability due to effects of fixation, processing and different evaluation criteria (k = 0.34 for ER status, k = 0.45 for PR status). The larger study driven by Viale [5] comparing central versus local assessment of IHC hormone status (with a 10% cut-off for positivity), revealed a reclassification (after central reviewing) of 69.5% and 1.1% of the ER-negative and ER-positive tumours, and of 44.5% and 4.6% of PR-negative and PR-positive tumours. They concluded that central IHC should be performed whenever possible to correct the influence of the laboratory where the assay has been performed. The quality of HER2 assays has been studied and a high degree of discordance between local and central laboratories has similarly been demonstrated (Table in S1 Table) [6–9].
Several studies investigated alternative methods to determine the hormonal receptor status (ER, PR) and HER2 status with multi-genes signatures to address these limitations [10–14]. The genomic grade index (GGI) is a 97-gene measure of tumour grade. It is assessed by the MapQuant test, based on an Affymetrix microarray-based assay. Previous studies have shown that the genomic grade is an important tool to assess breast cancer tumour grade [15–17] and prognosis [18–21]. It has been demonstrated that the GGI could also predict response to chemotherapy [22, 23]. By using the MapQuant test, not only to determine the genomic grade but also to assess the prognostic and predictive markers ER, PR and HER2, we could potentially get a more reliable and informative determination of tumour characteristics compared to the immune-histochemistry assessments, therefore leading to a more reliable treatment decision.
The aim of our study was to compare the ER, PR and HER2 status as determined by the MapQuant test to the routine immuno-histochemical tests in early stage invasive breast cancer in a large comprehensive cancer center.
Patients and Methods
Patients
The main inclusion criteria for the study were the absence of pathologic axillary lymph node involvement, a follow up above 10 years, and the absence of neoadjuvant therapy before surgery. Using these criteria, 456 early-stage (T1-T2 pN0) breast cancer patients treated between 1995 and 1996 could be retrieved from the Institut Curie database. From these cases, 169 flash-frozen samples stored at −80°C immediately after lumpectomy or mastectomy, and with more than 50% of tumor cells, were available. The histological features (histological type, histological grade assessed according to Elston and Ellis criteria, mitotic index, Ki67 proliferation index, ER status, PR status, HER2 over expression status) were re-assessed for each sample by a large panel of pathologists experienced in breast pathology, using tissue sections (4 μm) prepared from a representative part of each tumour block fixed in AFA (Alcool/Formol/Acide acétique).
From the 169 cases available for analysis, 163 passed quality controls and constituted the reference cohort. The clinical and pathological features of these 163 cases are summarized in Table 1. Tumours corresponded mainly to ductal (78%) or lobular (13.5%) infiltrating carcinoma. All of them were free of axillary lymph node metastases. Tumours were classified as histological grade I in 32.5%, grade II in 43% and grade III in 24.5% of cases. Immuno-phenotyping showed that ER was expressed in 86% (140/163) of the tumors, PR in 68% (111/163), HER2 in 6% (10/163) whereas 10% (17/163) remained negative for the three markers. The median follow-up duration was 154 months (6–182).
[Figure omitted. See PDF.]
Table 1. Clinical and pathological features of 163 invasive early-stage breast carcinoma.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.t001
Estrogen Receptor, Progesteron Receptor immunostaining
After rehydration and antigenic retrieval in citrate buffer (10 mM, pH 6.1), the tissue sections were stained for ER (ER, clone 6F11, Novocastra, 1/200), and PR (PR, clone 1A6, Novocastra, 1/200). Revelation of staining was performed using the Vectastain Elite ABC peroxidase mouse IgG kit (Vector Burlingame, CA) and diaminobenzidine (Dako A/S, Glostrup, Denmark) as chromogen. Positive and negative controls were included in each slide run. Cases were considered positive for ER and PR according to standardized guidelines using a cut-off of ≥10% stained tumour nuclei.
HER2 status
After rehydration and antigenic retrieval in citrate buffer (10 mM, pH 6.1), the tissue sections were stained for HER-2 (clone CB11, Novocastra, 1/1000). Revelation of staining was performed using the Vectastain Elite ABC peroxidase mouse IgG kit (Vector Burlingame, CA) and diaminobenzidine (Dako A/S, Glostrup, Denmark) as chromogen. Positive and negative controls were included in each slide run. The determination of HER2 overexpression was determined according to GEFPICS (Groupe d’étude des facteurs pronostiques immunohistochimiques dans le cancer du sein, Unicancer) guidelines [24] with FISH performed in all cases of HER2 2+ result.
MapQuant Dx protocol and Affymetrix data pre-processing
All 169 tumour samples available for genomic grade analysis contained more than 50% of cancer cells as assessed by H&E staining on frozen histological section of the samples used for the transcriptome analysis (manufacturer's recommendation: above 30%). RNA was extracted using Trizol method (Invitrogen) and purified using mirRNeasy kit (Qiagen). The concentration, integrity and purity of each RNA sample were measured using RNA 6000 LabChip kit with the Agilent 2100 Bioanalyser. The DNA microarrays used in this study were the Affymetrix HGU133 Plus 2.0 arrays (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA). Details of the RNA amplification, labeling and hybridization are available from the Affymetrix website (http://www.affymetrix.com). Chips were scanned using the GCS 3000 7G scanner (Affymetrix). Affymetrix quality controls variables were used to check data homogeneity. Profiles were normalized using RMAdx procedure (Robust Multi-array Average). RMA was applied to a reference set of microarrays (191 high-quality profiles), storing the parameters of the RMA fit. To process additional microarrays, these parameters are directly applied, without any re-estimation.
ER, PR, HER2 genomic status determination
MapQuant Dx Genomic Hormone Receptors (HR) quantifies the mRNA of 20 genes involved in breast-specific estrogen signaling and transcriptional cascades. The expression levels of these genes have been combined in an "ER score" and a "PR score" that best discriminate tumors expressing estrogen and/or progesterone receptors. Each score is based on a model fitted on 137 (76 ER- 0% vs 61 ER+ >60%) and 142 (93 PR- 0% vs 49 PR+ >30%) tumours respectively. The cut-off was set at 0, with score varying between -1.5 and +1.5. Based on this genomic score, ER and PR status are attributed to each tumour sample. A confidence interval (3:1 odds ratio of being ER- or ER+, PR- or PR+ respectively) was defined around the cut-off to ensure robustness and accuracy of status. For ER or PR scores into this confidence interval, the status is defined as “equivocal”.
MapQuant Dx genomic HER2 quantifies the mRNA of 6 genes of the HER2 amplicon whose activity leads to HER2 protein expression at cell membrane level. The genomic HER2 model was trained on 152 tumours (126 IHC 0 vs 26 IHC 3+). The cut-off was set at 0, with score varying between -3 and +3. Based on this genomic score, a HER2 status is attributed to each tumour sample. A confidence interval (3:1 odds ratio of being HER2- or HER2+) was defined around the cut-off to ensure robustness and accuracy of status determination. For HER2 scores into this confidence interval, the Her2 status is defined as “equivocal”.
Statistical Analysis
Baseline characteristics were compared between groups using Chi-square or Fisher's exact tests for categorical variables and Student's t-tests for continuous variables. The analyses were performed using the R software (http://cran.r-project.org).
Ethical approval
All experiments were performed retrospectively and in accordance with the French Bioethics Law 2004–800, the French National Institute of Cancer (INCa) Ethics Charter and after approval by the Institut Curie review board and ethics committee (Comit de Pilotage of the Groupe Sein). In the French legal context, our institutional review board waived the need for written informed consent from the participants. Moreover, women were informed of the research use of their tissues and did not declare any opposition for such researches. Data were analyzed anonymously.
Results
We retrieved the equivocal MapQuant results from the cohort to determine the concordance rates.
Comparison between MapQuant™ and IHC ER status
The ER Immunohistochemistry analysis showed that 86% of the tumours were classified as ER-positive (140/163). 142 out of 161 tumours were classified as genomic ER-positive (88%). The concordance rate between the two methods was 97.5% and the Cohen’s Kappa coefficient was 0.89.
The ER MapQuant test was classified as « equivocal » in 2 out of 163 cases (1%). Both tumours were IHC-positive with a 20% and 40% stained tumour nuclei respectively.
We found only 4 tumours out of 161 (2.5%) with discrepant IHC and genomic results (Fig 1). ER MapQuant scores distribution related to the ER-IHC status is shown in Fig 2A. The four IHC-negative tumours with a positive ER MapQuant expression value showed an absence of stained tumour nuclei. Fig 3 shows the ER-IHC slides of these discordant cases compared with an ER-IHC-negative case also found negative with the ER MapQuant test. 3 out of these 4 ER-IHC negative discordant cases had a high ER MapQuant expression value above 1 (Fig 1).
[Figure omitted. See PDF.]
Fig 1. A: Estrogen-Receptor status (ER). Comparison between the Immunohistochemistry analysis (IHC) and the MapQuant test. Top. ER status determined by IHC referred to MapQuant test. Green: IHC-negative tumours. Red: IHC-positive tumours. Vertical axis: MapQuant test values. 4 IHC-negative cases were positive with the MapQuant test. Bottom. MapQuant determination of the ER status. Green: negative. Black: equivocal. Red: positive. Both equivocal cases corresponded to IHC-positive tumours. B: Progesterone-Receptor status (PR): comparison between the Immunohistochemistry analysis (IHC) and the MapQuant test. Top. PR status determined by IHC referred to MapQuant test. Green: IHC-negative tumours. Red: IHC-positive tumours. Vertical axis: MapQuant test values. 11 IHC-negative cases were positive with the MapQuant test. Bottom. Determination of the PR status by the MapQuant test. Green: negative. Black: equivocal. Red: positive. Equivocal cases corresponded to 15 IHC-positive tumours and 20 IHC-negative tumours. C: HER2 status.
Correlation between the Immunohistochemistry analysis (IHC) and the MapQuant test. Top. HER2 status determined by IHC referred to MapQuant test. Green: IHC-negative tumours. Red: IHC-positive tumours. Vertical axis: MapQuant test values. Only one IHC-negative case was found positive with the MapQuant test. Bottom. Determination of the HER2 status by the MapQuant test. Green: negative. Black: equivocal. Red: positive. Equivocal cases corresponded to 2 IHC-negative tumours.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.g001
[Figure omitted. See PDF.]
Fig 2. ER (A) and PR (B) expression by IHC and MapQuant test.
Y axis: MapQuant values. X axis: Immunohistochemistry measure of ER and PR as percentage of stained tumour cells. Threshold for IHC positive sample is indicated by the vertical line (10%). MapQuant status. Green dot: negative. Black dot: equivocal. Red dot: positive.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.g002
[Figure omitted. See PDF.]
Fig 3. IHC pictures of 4 discordant cases for ER status.
Patients (A-D) were IHC-negative/MapQuant-positive. Patient (E) was IHC-negative/MapQuant-negative. Patient (F) was IHC-positive 100%/MapQuant-positive.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.g003
Comparison between the MapQuant™PR status and the PR IHC status
The PR Immunohistochemistry analysis showed that 68% of the tumours were PR-positive (111/163). 107 out of 128 tumours were classified as genomic PR-positive (83%). The concordance rate between the two methods was 91.4% and the Cohen’s Kappa coefficient was 0.74.
The PR MapQuant test was classified as « undetermined » in 35 out of 163 cases (21%). This group was equally composed of IHC-negative (57%) and IHC-positive (43%) tumours.
The PR status discrepancies were observed exclusively in the PR IHC-negative tumour subgroup. 11 out of 21 PR IHC-negative tumours (34%) were classified PR MapQuant positive. The PR MapQuant test value ranged between 0.5 and 1.0 (Figs 1 and 2B), while the percent positivity for IHC ranged from 10 to 100%. PR MapQuant expression values distribution related to the PR-IHC status is shown in Fig 2B.
Comparison between the MapQuant™ HER2 status and the HER2 IHC status
The HER2 Immunohistochemistry analysis showed that only 6% of the tumours were HER2-positive (10/163). 11 out of 161 tumours were classified as genomic HER2-positive (7%). The concordance rate between the two methods was 99.3% and the Cohen’s Kappa coefficient was 0.86.
The HER2 MapQuant test was classified as « undetermined » in 2 out of 163 cases (1%). Both tumours were IHC-negative.
One HER2 IHC-negative tumour was found positive with a high HER2 MapQuant genomic score (Fig 1).
Fig 4 shows the IHC slide of this discordant case for HER2 status.
[Figure omitted. See PDF.]
Fig 4. IHC picture of one discordant case for HER2 status.
Patient (A) was IHC-negative/MapQuant-negative. Patient (B) was IHC-negative/MapQuant-positive. Patient (C) was IHC-positive/MapQuant-positive.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.g004
Treatment decision based on the IHC and genomic molecular subtype classification
ER, PR and HER2 IHC status are surrogate markers able to identify the breast cancer molecular subtypes (Triple-negative, HER2pos ERpos, HER2pos ERneg, ERpos HER2neg). This classification is a major determinant of treatment decision. In our study, the IHC/genomic discordant results had almost no impact in terms of treatment choices. Only 2 out of 163 patients (1.2%) should have received a different treatment using the MapQuant results compared to the standard IHC tests. An IHC triple negative tumour (ER 5%, PR 5%) was re-classified as genomic ERpos/PRpos/HER2neg and would have received hormonal therapy. A second patient with an IHC ERpos/PRpos/HER2neg (HER2 IHC = 1+) tumour was re-classified as genomic ERpos/PRpos/HER2pos and would have received a targeted therapy (trastuzumab).
MapQuant test values of ER, PR and HER2 status compared to IHC are summarized in Table 2.
[Figure omitted. See PDF.]
Table 2. MapQuant test values of Estrogen-Receptor (ER), Progesterone-Receptor (PR) and HER2 status compared to immunohistochemistry (IHC).
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.t002
Discussion
Our study was the first to determine the accuracy of the MapQuant assay to assess the ER, PR and HER2 status.
Several studies investigated the accuracy of alternative methods for ER, PR and HER2 evaluations that may be more reliable and accurate than IHC in invasive breast cancers [10–14].
Currently, there are two commercially available prognostic breast cancer tests based on gene expression technology: 1) Oncotype DX (Genomic Health, Redwood City, California), 2) Mammaprint (Agendia BV, Amsterdam, the Netherlands) [25–31]. We compared the results of our study to published data (Table 3).
[Figure omitted. See PDF.]
Table 3. Concordance (%) of the main Gene Expression Assays in determining ER, PR and HER2 status compare to corresponding IHC reference.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.t003
In our study, the genomic status correlated well with the IHC ER status. Our results are in agreement with Gong and colleagues [13], who investigated the use of Affymetrix microarrays for quantification of ESR1 and ERBB2 mRNA levels. In this paper, an ESR1mRNA cutoff value was identified which discriminates ER-positive tumours with an overall accuracy of 90% in the training set, 88% and 96% in two validation sets.
Roepman and colleagues [10] compared IHC with a second microarray-based mRNA expression level methodology (Mammaprint) and found a high level of concordance for ER status (93%). In their study, 4% of IHC-positive samples were classified negative using microarray, whereas in our study no IHC-positive samples were reclassified negative with the MapQuant test.
Viale et al [11] also found good concordance for ER status (98%) with the TargetPrint test in the first 800 patients enrolled in the MINDACT trial.
Badve and colleagues [11] compared a central 21-gene RT-PCR assay (OncotypeDX) to a local and a central IHC assay. They obtained good results for the ER status determination. Concordance between local IHC and central RT-PCR was 91%, and 93% between central IHC and central RT-PCR. Although concordance was high, IHC ER-negative cases that were RT-PCR positive (13% and 14% by local and central IHC) were more common than IHC-positive cases that were RT-PCR negative (1% and 5% by local and central IHC). Varga et al [11] detected a high concordance in hormone receptor and HER2 status between conventional IHC and OncotypeDX.
In our study, the PR status analysis showed the most discordant results between the two methodologies. 34% of the tumours classified PR negative by IHC were positive with the MapQuant test. Furthermore the « equivocal » group represented 21.4% of the tumours.
Our findings are in agreement with other studies on alternative gene expression technologies that report a lower concordance between PR mRNA levels and IHC. Badve and colleagues [11] found a concordance of 88% and 90% between local IHC, central IHC and central RT-PCR respectively (OncotypeDX). Roepman et al [10] found a concordance of 83% only between microarray (Mammaprint) and central IHC, similar with a lower concordance of 85% with the TargetPrint test.
Concerning the HER2 status, there is a strong correlation between the two measures. We could see that using the genomic measure, we reclassified an IHC negative as genomic positive, which means that one extra patient should receive targeted therapy. The treatment decision for the equivocal group remains to be determined. Knowing the HER2 oncogenic mechanism (gene amplification leading to increased mRNA expression and subsequently protein overexpression), one can understand the high concordance between the assessment of protein expression by IHC analysis and gene status by MapQuant test. Gong [13] also compared the determination of HER2 status between IHC/FISH and Affymetrix gene expression profiling. They identified an overall accuracy of 93% in the training set, 89% and 90% in the two validation sets. The Mammaprint test also showed a 96% concordance for the HER2 status determination [10]. Baehner et al [14] found an overall concordance of 97% and a positive agreement of 98% between HER2 FISH assay and qRT-PCR using the Oncotype DX test.
Dabbs et al [12] studied the same test in a large independent multicenter study. They showed even with an overall concordance of more than 95%, that the percent positive agreement between the OncotypeDX test and IHC/FISH was less than 50% because of the small number of positive cases heavily diluted by the large number of negative patients in this biased population.
The MapQuant test is based on gene expression and provides information on mRNA expression, whereas IHC gives information on protein expression. As underlined by Allred in an editorial on problems and solutions in the evaluation of hormone receptors in breast cancers [32], there is no reason to expect similar results or performance from two different tests measuring either protein or mRNA expression, despite the fact that studies have found good concordance results especially for ER status between the two methods [10, 11].
The whole tumoural tissue (infiltrative carcinoma and DCIS (Ductal Carcinoma In Situ)) is extracted to obtain mRNA for the MapQuant test. So the ER, PR and HER2 status with MapQuant are made on the infiltrative carcinoma, DCIS and normal glands. Whereas the pathologist read only information about infiltrative carcinoma by doing IHC, excluding DCIS and normal breast tissue.
Plus, the MapQuant test is based on frozen tissue, whereas IHC is assessed on fixed tissues (FormalinFixedParaffinEmbedded). The two tests are based on two different tissue areas and the discordant results can be explained by the intratumoral heterogeneity.
The threshold for hormone receptors positivity in IHC can be set at 1 or 10% positive cells detection [13]. It is usually set at 10% in France. We re-analyzed the cases around/below the 10% cut-off to make our results more reliable for comparison with other studies (Table in S2 Table).
If we use a 1% cut-off to define a positive hormone receptor status:
1. -. One case out of the 4 discordant cases would become ER positive (5% positivity) with IHC.
2. -. 3 cases out of the 11 discordant cases would become PR positive (5% positivity) with IHC.
This new results doesn’t change significatively the concordance rates (3 instead of 4 discordant ER cases/ 8 instead of 11 discordant PR cases). The cut-off divergence doesn’t explane the high discrepancy in PR status between the 2 assays.
Concerning the lower PR concordance, Roepman et al [10] observed a higher proportion of cases that were IHC-positive/microarray-positive than IHC-positive/microarray-negative. They raised the possibility of a tumor subgroup that wouldn’t ‘express protein despite the presence of mRNA transcripts’.
In our study we observed more IHC-negative/MapQuant-positive and IHC-negative/MapQuant-undetermined results (6% and 12%) than IHC-positive/MapQuant-negative and IHC-positive/MapQuant-undetermined (0% and 9%).
Contrary to other studies, we didn’t find IHC-positive samples with MapQuant-negative result for each of the three biomarkers analysed (ER, PR, HER2). Few tumours were reclassified as MapQuant-undetermined, 1,4% (2/140) for ER status and 13,5% (15/111) for PR status, and none for the HER2 status.
In our study, one patient would have been treated with trastuzumab therapy using the MapQuant-test. The major risk of this treatment is cardiotoxicity. However, the NSABP B-31 trial recently revealed that only 4.0% of patients who received trastuzumab in addition to adjuvant chemotherapy experienced a cardiac event after 7 years follow-up [33].
Conclusion
In conclusion, our results show that the MapQuant assay, based on mRNA expression assay, provides an objective and quantitative assessment of Estrogen receptor, Progesterone receptor and HER2 status in invasive breast cancer. The MapQuant test has similar performance compared to other gene expression profiling tests. It would need to be prospectively validated to prove its benefit and its medico economic impact beyond the use of standard clinico-pathological prognosis variables to guide the choice of adjuvant treatment.
Supporting Information
[Figure omitted. See PDF.]
S1 Table. Concordance between local and central laboratories for HER2 assay.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.s001
(TIFF)
S2 Table. MapQuant test values of Estrogen-Receptor (ER), Progesterone-Receptor (PR) and HER2 status compared to immunohistochemistry (IHC) with a 1% cut-off positivity.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474.s002
(TIFF)
Author Contributions
Conceived and designed the experiments: DM FR XS. Performed the experiments: DM FR XS. Analyzed the data: FR XS. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: FR XS ML. Wrote the paper: DM FR ML AV RR BS DG MC. Full-time employees of QIAGEN Marseille, funder of the project: SC HP.
Citation: Mouttet D, Laé M, Caly M, Gentien D, Carpentier S, Peyro-Saint-Paul H, et al. (2016) Estrogen-Receptor, Progesterone-Receptor and HER2 Status Determination in Invasive Breast Cancer. Concordance between Immuno-Histochemistry and MapQuant™ Microarray Based Assay. PLoS ONE 11(2): e0146474. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0146474
1. Mudduwa L, Liyanage T. Immunohistochemical assessment of hormone receptor status of breast carcinoma: interobserver variation of the quick score. Indian J Med Sci, 2009. 63(1): p. 21–7. pmid:19346635
2. Chebil G, Bendahl PO, Fernö M. Estrogen and progesterone receptor assay in paraffin-embedded breast cancer—reproducibility of assessment. Acta Oncol, 2003. 42(1): p. 43–7. pmid:12665330
3. Rhodes A, Jasani B, Barnes DM, Bobrow LG, Miller KD. Reliability of immunohistochemical demonstration of oestrogen receptors in routine practice: interlaboratory variance in the sensitivity of detection and evaluation of scoring systems. J Clin Pathol, 2000. 53(2): p. 125–30. pmid:10767828
4. Arihiro K, Umemura S, Kurosumi M, Moriya T, Oyama T, Yamashita H, et al. Comparison of evaluations for hormone receptors in breast carcinoma using two manual and three automated immunohistochemical assays. Am J Clin Pathol, 2007. 127(3): p. 356–65. pmid:17276950
5. Viale G, Regan MM, Maiorano E, Mastropasqua MG, Dell'Orto P, Rasmussen BB, et al. Prognostic and predictive value of centrally reviewed expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors in a randomized trial comparing letrozole and tamoxifen adjuvant therapy for postmenopausal early breast cancer: BIG 1–98. J Clin Oncol, 2007. 25(25): p. 3846–52. pmid:17679725
6. Perez EA, Suman VJ, Davidson NE, Martino S, Kaufman PA, Lingle WL, et al. HER2 testing by local, central, and reference laboratories in specimens from the North Central Cancer Treatment Group N9831 intergroup adjuvant trial. J Clin Oncol, 2006. 24(19): p. 3032–8. pmid:16809727
7. Paik S, Bryant J, Tan-Chiu E, Romond E, Hiller W, Park K, et al. Real-world performance of HER2 testing—National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project experience. J Natl Cancer Inst, 2002. 94(11): p. 852–4. pmid:12048273
8. Reddy JC, Reimann JD, Anderson SM, Klein PM. Concordance between central and local laboratory HER2 testing from a community-based clinical study. Clin Breast Cancer, 2006. 7(2): p. 153–7. pmid:16800975
9. Lacroix-Triki M, Mathoulin-Pelissier S, Ghnassia JP, Macgrogan G, Vincent-Salomon A, Brouste V, et al. High inter-observer agreement in immunohistochemical evaluation of HER-2/neu expression in breast cancer: a multicentre GEFPICS study. Eur J Cancer, 2006. 42(17): p. 2946–53. pmid:16989997
10. Roepman P, Horlings HM, Krijgsman O, Kok M, Bueno-de-Mesquita JM, Bender R, et al. Microarray-based determination of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and HER2 receptor status in breast cancer. Clin Cancer Res, 2009. 15(22): p. 7003–11. pmid:19887485
11. Badve SS, Baehner FL, Gray RP, Childs BH, Maddala T, Liu ML, et al. Estrogen- and progesterone-receptor status in ECOG 2197: comparison of immunohistochemistry by local and central laboratories and quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction by central laboratory. J Clin Oncol, 2008. 26(15): p. 2473–81. pmid:18487567
12. Dabbs DJ, Klein ME, Mohsin SK, Tubbs RR, Shuai Y, Bhargava R. High false-negative rate of HER2 quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction of the Oncotype DX test: an independent quality assurance study. J Clin Oncol, 2011. 29(32): p. 4279–85. pmid:21990395
13. Gong Y, Yan K, Lin F, Anderson K, Sotiriou C, Andre F, et al. Determination of oestrogen-receptor status and ERBB2 status of breast carcinoma: a gene-expression profiling study. Lancet Oncol, 2007. 8(3): p. 203–11. pmid:17329190
14. Baehner FL, Achacoso N, Maddala T, Shak S, Quesenberry CP Jr, Goldstein LC, et al. Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 assessment in a case-control study: comparison of fluorescence in situ hybridization and quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction performed by central laboratories. J Clin Oncol, 2010. 28(28): p. 4300–6. pmid:20697093
15. Ignatiadis M, Sotiriou C. Understanding the molecular basis of histologic grade. Pathobiology, 2008. 75(2): p. 104–11. pmid:18544965
16. Sotiriou C, Wirapati P, Loi S, Harris A, Fox S, Smeds J, et al. Gene expression profiling in breast cancer: understanding the molecular basis of histologic grade to improve prognosis. J Natl Cancer Inst, 2006. 98(4): p. 262–72. pmid:16478745
17. Metzger Filho O, Ignatiadis M, Sotiriou C. Genomic Grade Index: An important tool for assessing breast cancer tumor grade and prognosis. Crit Rev Oncol Hematol, 2011. 77(1): p. 20–9. pmid:20138540
18. Reyal F, Bollet MA, Caly M, Gentien D, Carpentier S, Peyro-Saint-Paul H, et al. Respective prognostic value of genomic grade and histological proliferation markers in early stage (pN0) breast carcinoma. Plos one, 2012. 7(4): p. e35184. pmid:22529987
19. Chowdhury N. Histopathological and genomic grading provide complementary prognostic information in breast cancer: a study on publicly available datasets. Patholog Res Int, 2011. 2011: p. 890938. pmid:21845210
20. Ignatiadis M, Desmedt C. Predicting risk of breast cancer recurrence using gene-expression profiling. Pharmacogenomics, 2007. 8(1): p. 101–11. pmid:17187513
21. Loi S, Haibe-Kains B, Desmedt C, Lallemand F, Tutt AM, Gillet C, et al. Definition of clinically distinct molecular subtypes in estrogen receptor-positive breast carcinomas through genomic grade. J Clin Oncol, 2007. 25(10): p. 1239–46. pmid:17401012
22. Liedtke C, Hatzis C, Symmans WF, Desmedt C, Haibe-Kains B, Valero V, et al. Genomic grade index is associated with response to chemotherapy in patients with breast cancer. J Clin Oncol, 2009. 27(19): p. 3185–91. pmid:19364972
23. Naoi Y, Kishi K, Tanei T, Tsunashima R, Tominaga N, Baba Y, et al. High genomic grade index associated with poor prognosis for lymph node-negative and estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers and with good response to chemotherapy. Cancer, 2011. 117(3): p. 472–9. pmid:20878674
24. Penault-Llorca F, Vincent-Salomon A, MacGrogan G, Roger P, Treilleux I, Valent A, et al. 2014 Update of the GEFPICS' recommendations for HER2 status determination in breast cancers in France. Ann Pathol, 2010. 30(5): p. 357–73. pmid:21055523
25. Wirapati P, Sotiriou C, Kunkel S, Farmer P, Pradervand S, Haibe-Kains B, et al. Meta-analysis of gene expression profiles in breast cancer: toward a unified understanding of breast cancer subtyping and prognosis signatures. Breast Cancer Res, 2008. 10(4): p. R65. pmid:18662380
26. Marchionni L, Wilson RF, Marinopoulos SS, Wolff AC, Parmigiani G, Bass EB, et al. Impact of gene expression profiling tests on breast cancer outcomes. Evid Rep Technol Assess (Full Rep), 2007(160): p. 1–105.
27. Ross JS, Hatzis C, Symmans WF, Pusztai L, Hortobágyi GN. Commercialized multigene predictors of clinical outcome for breast cancer. Oncologist, 2008. 13(5): p. 477–93. pmid:18515733
28. Haibe-Kains B, Desmedt C, Piette F, Buyse M, Cardoso F, Van't Veer L, et al. Comparison of prognostic gene expression signatures for breast cancer. BMC Genomics, 2008. 9: p. 394. pmid:18717985
29. Paik S. Is gene array testing to be considered routine now? Breast, 2011. 20 Suppl 3: p. S87–91. pmid:22015300
30. Dobbe E, Gurney K, Kiekow S, Lafferty JS, Kolesar JM. Gene-expression assays: new tools to individualize treatment of early-stage breast cancer. Am J Health Syst Pharm, 2008. 65(1): p. 23–8. pmid:18159035
31. Marchionni L, Wilson RF, Wolff AC, Marinopoulos S, Parmigiani G, Bass EB. Systematic review: gene expression profiling assays in early-stage breast cancer. Ann Intern Med, 2008. 148(5): p. 358–69. pmid:18252678
32. Allred DC. Problems and solutions in the evaluation of hormone receptors in breast cancer. J Clin Oncol, 2008. 26(15): p. 2433–5. pmid:18487563
33. Romond EH, Jeong JH, Rastogi P, Swain SM, Geyer CE Jr, Ewer MS, et al. Seven-Year Follow-Up Assessment of Cardiac Function in NSABP B-31, a Randomized Trial Comparing Doxorubicin and Cyclophosphamide Followed by Paclitaxel (ACP) With ACP Plus Trastuzumab As Adjuvant Therapy for Patients With Node-Positive, Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2-Positive Breast Cancer. J Clin Oncol, 2012.
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer
© 2016 Mouttet et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.
Abstract
Background
Hormone receptor status and HER2 status are of critical interest in determining the prognosis of breast cancer patients. Their status is routinely assessed by immunohistochemistry (IHC). However, it is subject to intra-laboratory and inter-laboratory variability. The aim of our study was to compare the estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor and HER2 status as determined by the MapQuant™ test to the routine immuno-histochemical tests in early stage invasive breast cancer in a large comprehensive cancer center.
Patients and Methods
We retrospectively studied 163 invasive early-stage breast carcinoma with standard IHC status. The genomic status was determined using the MapQuant™ test providing the genomic grade index.
Results
We found only 4 tumours out of 161 (2.5%) with discrepant IHC and genomic results concerning ER status. The concordance rate between the two methods was 97.5% and the Cohen’s Kappa coefficient was 0.89.
Comparison between the MapQuant™ PR status and the PR IHC status gave more discrepancies. The concordance rate between the two methods was 91.4% and the Cohen’s Kappa coefficient was 0.74.
The HER2 MapQuant™ test was classified as « undetermined » in 2 out of 163 cases (1.2%). One HER2 IHC-negative tumour was found positive with a high HER2 MapQuant™ genomic score. The concordance rate between the two methods was 99.3% and the Cohen’s Kappa coefficient was 0.86.
Conclusion
Our results show that the MapQuant™ assay, based on mRNA expression assay, provides an objective and quantitative assessment of Estrogen receptor, Progesterone receptor and HER2 status in invasive breast cancer.
You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer
Neither ProQuest nor its licensors make any representations or warranties with respect to the translations. The translations are automatically generated "AS IS" and "AS AVAILABLE" and are not retained in our systems. PROQUEST AND ITS LICENSORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES FOR AVAILABILITY, ACCURACY, TIMELINESS, COMPLETENESS, NON-INFRINGMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Your use of the translations is subject to all use restrictions contained in your Electronic Products License Agreement and by using the translation functionality you agree to forgo any and all claims against ProQuest or its licensors for your use of the translation functionality and any output derived there from. Hide full disclaimer